Third Quarterly Report, July – September, 2007

Third Quarterly Report, July – September, 2007

mCÄmNÐlÉkßrkm<úCa DOCUMENTATION CENTER OF CAMBODIA Phnom Penh, Cambodia www.dccam.org Third Quarter Report July – September 2007 SUMMARY Activities for the Khmer Rouge Tribunal On July 18, the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia’s (ECCC) Office of the Co-Prosecutor made an introductory submission to the Tribunal’s co-investigating judges requesting that five individuals be charged with crimes against humanity and other crimes. Duch, the former head of Tuol Sleng Prison, was formally charged with crimes against humanity on July 31. The oldest surviving member of the Khmer Rouge leadership, 81 year-old Nuon Chea was arrested on September 19. Both men are now being held in provisional detention at the ECCC. The Center for International Human Rights at Northwestern University School of Law, DC-Cam, and the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center launched a new Cambodia Tribunal Monitor website (http://www.cambodiatribunal.org/) in early September. One of the site’s main features will be web casts of the Khmer Rouge Tribunal proceedings. At the request of the ECCC’s Defense Support Section, DC-Cam agreed to host an orientation course for foreign co-lawyers and legal consultants. In late August, it held sessions for four legal personnel and two interns. In addition, Noun Chea's defense lawyer requested documents from DC-Cam this quarter. In August, members of DC-Cam’s Legal Response and other teams met with the Secretary General of the National Bank of Cambodia to discuss the possibility of placing images on riel notes that would memorialize the suffering Cambodians experienced during Democratic Kampuchea. The Legal Response team provided scans or other copies of 25,319 documents to the ECCC this quarter. Documentation Our Documentation Teams completed work on 4,854 records, 2764 worksheets, and 53 books this quarter. The books are printouts of the records from our Access Database and Quarter 3, 2007, page 1 allow students, scholars and the media to search our databases in hard copy. They also produced 15 reels of microfilms from the Center’s archives. DC-Cam is planning to reprint its four existing exhibitions at Tuol Sleng because they have deteriorated with age. It is also working on three new exhibitions from the DC- Cam monograph Vanished, the exhibit mounted last year at Rutgers entitled Night of the Khmer Rouge, and an exhibit on DC-Cam’s tours of the ECCC. Promoting Accountability Much of this team’s time during the quarter was devoted to assisting with the Student Outreach Program and file transcription. In September, they traveled to Kandal province in an attempt to interview former cadres who they had been unable to locate on earlier trips. But with the passage of nearly 30 years since the fall of Democratic Kampuchea, many of these men and women have moved away or could not be located. The team was able to interview two former cadres in Mondul Kiri province and former S-21 photographer Nhem En. Public Education and Outreach Together with the Khmer Youth Association, DC-Cam hosted 186 high school and university students from 7 provinces on visits to the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, the Choeung Ek Genocide Memorial Center, and the ECCC courtroom. The Living Documents Project Team also surveyed villagers on whether they were receiving sufficient information on the Tribunal and from whom they would prefer to receive it. Most of the commune chiefs preferred to receive information from the government, while most of the village chiefs preferred the ECCC as their source. Most also get their news from the radio. From August 16-22, 127 Cambodian university student volunteers, who had received training at DC-Cam, traveled to 227 remote villages in all of the country’s provinces, where they learned about the daily lives and hardships of people who lived during Democratic Kampuchea. Accompanied by DC-Cam staffers, they the students distributed 6,189 sets of documents and conducted 1,031 interviews using prepared questionnaires. The outreach activities were covered by Radio Free Asia, Voice of America, and Raksmei Kampuchea newspaper. In September, the first issue of the project’s quarterly magazine was printed (it will be distributed in October). The magazine is for all of Cambodia’s ethnic minorities, with a focus on the Cham community, and is about the same size as the Center’s monthly magazine Searching for the Truth. The Public Information Room recorded 459 visitors this quarter (low attendance may have been due to the summer holidays or may not have been fully recorded). To encourage more visitors, DC-Cam will print announcements about the work of the PIR in its monthly magazine and send information sheets to local universities. One PIR road trip was held this quarter, to two villages in Kampot province. About 160 people Quarter 3, 2007, page 2 attended; they reported 5 cases of sexual abuse during Democratic Kampuchea. In the United States, the Public Information Room at Rutgers University was given a new and larger space. The Film Team continued working on the 30-minute documentary it is producing entitled “Preparing for Justice.” It will feature people who participated in DC-Cam’s ECCC tours. To date, the film’s script has been transcribed and the subtitles completed. In addition, it interviewed 55 people who live near the courtroom and in Phnom Penh about their reactions to the arrests of Nuon Chea and Duch. They found that some people were unaware of the Tribunal or the charges, but those who knew about them wanted to see the trials and learn who was responsible for the killings during Democratic Kampuchea. The International Republic Institute’s (IRI) Youth Festival was held in Svay Rieng this year from August 20-24; it was attended by at least 2,000 people. The Film Team screened DC-Cam’s new documentary to about 80 students, who found the documentary footage from Democratic Kampuchea to be very interesting. DC-Cam’s exhibition at the festival included photographs of perpetrators and victims of the Khmer Rouge regime, books published by DC-Cam, ECCC handbooks, and copies of the Center’s magazine. Student volunteers from the Royal University’s Fine Arts School performed a 20-minute one- act play by DC-Cam summer legal associate Kelly Heidrich entitled “Searching for the Truth.” About 800 people attended the August performances at the IRI Youth Festival. This quarter, we were able to find information on 7 of the 28 family tracing requests received. Research, Translation and Publication Dany Long and Vannak Sokh continued collecting materials for their research on a comparison of education of the Phnong ethnic group in Mondul Kiri province (Cambodia) and Dak Nong province (Vietnam). In addition to developing an interview for this study, Nean Yin and Sokkym Em reviewed over 30 of the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum’s visitor books and transcribed/translated comments from them this quarter Two English language monographs are nearing publication: Ian Harris’ Buddhism under Pol Pot and Sara Colm and Sorya Sim’s Khmer Rouge Purges in the Mondul Kiri Highlands: Region 106. Terith Chy has completed the translation of Vanished: Stories of the New People under Democratic Kampuchea. We anticipate publishing the Khmer edition next quarter. National and International Cooperation This quarter, DC-Cam accompanied Mr. Robert B. Zoellick, the new president of the World Bank, on a tour of the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, as well as Scott Gudes, Minority Staff Director of the US Senate Budget Committee and Daniel Brandt, the Committee’s Chief Economist. The Center also welcomed Craig Tippins, Commander, Quarter 3, 2007, page 3 Detachment 1, Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command, based in Bangkok. He and a colleague talked with Director Youk Chhang about finding information on US personnel missing as a result of the Vietnam War before, during and after the Khmer Rouge period. DC-Cam will assist the Voice of America in a series of eight “HELLO VOA” talk shows on the Khmer Rouge Tribunal; these programs would allow listeners to call in with their questions and comments. In addition, VOA began airing portions of A History of Democratic Kampuchea on August 28. Last, DC-Cam has been named as one of Concordia University’s partners on its Life Stories of Montrealers Displaced by War, Genocide, and other Human Rights Violations Project. The project will use oral history to explore survivors’ experiences and social memories of trauma and displacement. Beyond the Tribunal DC-Cam will start the second phase of the Genocide Education Project in January 2008; it will focus on guidebook development, teachers’ training, workshops and translation. Strong demand from students and the public necessitated that we publish another 3,000 copies of the text in Khmer during July. In September, Mr. Dy began working with Tomoe Otsuki, a post-graduate student at the University of British Columbia, on translating the textbook into Japanese. The staff of the Victims of Torture Project received training in the United States and Cambodia this quarter. They also interviewed 18 people in three provinces who were identified as suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder and referred them to government mental health clinics. The team also worked with Dr. Devon Hinton of Harvard Medical School to modify parts of the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire, which the project uses in identifying PTSD victims. 1. ACTIVITIES FOR THE KHMER ROUGE TRIBUNAL 1) General News Names Submitted for Indictment On July 18, 2007, the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia’s (ECCC) Office of the Co-Prosecutor notified the public that it had made an introductory submission to the Tribunal’s co-investigating judges. The submission requested that five individuals be charged with crimes against humanity and other crimes.

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